True success doesn’t cost your family or faith. Align ambition with what lasts: presence with loved ones, intimacy with God, and obedience to His calling.
A mentor of mine shared an experience with me about a time he once had it “all”…
He was offered CEO at 35. Dream salary. Recognition. Influence. He thought it was what he always wanted.
But it was a trap…
The very thing he was chasing was the thing threatening to destroy the people he loved most.
His wife was exhausted, and his kids were always asking why he was never home.
He was building a career but losing his family.
One night, he prayed a prayer that changed everything:
“God, don’t let me gain the world and lose my soul. Show me how to lead without losing what matters most.”
It was simple, but it reframed his life.
Instead of asking, “How high can I climb?” He began asking, “Who do I become if I climb?”
Instead of measuring success in promotions, he began measuring it in terms of presence.
Was he present for his wife and kids?
Was he present with God?
The Bible puts it plainly in Mark 8:36, “What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?”
We often think of that verse as only about eternity, but it’s also about today. Your soul is reflected in your relationship with God and with the people He has entrusted to you.
What good is a title if your kids barely know you?
What good is a raise if your marriage is on life support?
You’re making $500K a year. You can recite every department’s OKR for this quarter and measure their success.
Bravo. Good for you.
But…
Who’s your son’s best friend at daycare?
What’s your daughter’s favorite book?
Did you know your wife wants to go back to school?
How’s your mom doing? When’s the last time you called her?
These answers matter.
God designed my friend to be a go-getter. He had to stay true to that. Praying for less ambition wouldn't be true to his God-given nature and calling. Instead, he needed to pray for better alignment with what mattered most.
Family first.
Faith at the center.
Career in its rightful place.
He still worked hard. He still wanted to succeed. But no longer at the expense of what mattered most.
So, let me ask you: what’s driving you right now?
Are you climbing a ladder that will leave you alone at the top?
Or are you building a life where success and soul can grow together?